
Dear Russians, it’s so amusing to see you crying because the rabbit lost a leg in the military electronics factory, lost an arm, and they can’t dig it up. And how enraged those Ukrainians are!
What’s the matter? I’m “not interested in politics,” but it seems that the question of whether to spare the woman who assembled thousands of cartridges in a shift (which were then used to take out a company with a Maxim gun from a closed position) was already answered in the First World War. First, they were killed from dirigibles, then airplanes, and then…
We all remember how Russians cry that the bad Americans and British bombed Dresden. They just forget that it was at Stalin’s request, who asked to turn sorting stations into rubble during the offensive. And the RAF wasn’t good at precision bombing, so they bombed inaccurately — God knows his own.
Whether to leave the Hugo Boss factories (as now they tell about Iran, that the industry can’t be bombed because they won’t have anything to eat) — back then, this question didn’t arise at all. And now, I think, if we had a few thousand missiles a month instead of a couple of hundred, like you fired at us, this question wouldn’t arise either.
Wanted to earn twice as much in military production compared to the market average? Enjoy a delicious lunch and commute with transportation? Turns out, you’ll have to visit surgery — to remove stitches and repair a broken limb for many hundreds of thousands of rubles. And lunch ended up with a taste of titanium bolts. A small thing, but satisfying.
Don’t cry, dear ones. It’s movement, like in Peter the Great’s times. And if grandma had certain organs, she’d be grandpa. But grandma was taken out in accounting, and now she won’t calculate bonuses for overtime and hazard pay. What a pity.
I’ll go eat.

While Europe and the USA debate whether Comrade Trump has a plan, or if Comrade Netanyahu has cunningly manipulated him, let’s return to applied diplomacy. Because a trilateral meeting is likely next week.
1. Everyone saw the raid on the “Kremniy EL” plant in Bryansk. Rockets flew 110 km from the state border and destroyed a shop measuring 140×145 m. A clear success of the “SVO.”
Now the Russians have begun actively saying that there’s no plant there, it’s long out of operation! And if there is, it produces wooden toys.
But the devious business reference sites bluntly state: “… The enterprise produces more than 1200 types of microelectronic products. Over 90% of its production is used in the defense industry and is a component for strategic missile complexes ‘Topol-M’ and ‘Bulava,’ anti-aircraft missile systems S-300 and S-400, ‘Pantsir-S1’ missile-gun complexes, avionics of MiG and Su aircraft.”
Since 2020, 8 billion rubles have been invested in production modernization. According to official data, 130 pieces of equipment have been purchased. In the fall of 2025, the company’s CEO Oleg Dantsev complained at the “Microelectronics” forum that they are working on outdated foreign equipment, new capacities are in short supply. Therefore, even the removal of a few machines is painful.
The plant has been attacked several times. Probably, some part of the production was relocated. But moving 1,800 personnel and established production lines is no easy task. So the damage is significant.
2. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves with Tolyatti, we’ll wait for official reports.
We’ll also leave aside the misadventures of the “Acron” group, which began in Smolensk (“Dorogobuzh”) and continued in Novgorod (actually “Acron”).
3. Currently, one of the main negotiation “subgroups” works in a middle-strike format. There is a very intense discussion illuminated by SBS, SSO, and consolidated by the General Staff.
Yesterday, SBS immobilized, and then finished off a “Buk M-1” SAM launcher in Zaporizhzhia region.
Overnight, SBS and SSO destroyed a dozen MTO warehouses in Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia regions. In particular, following the destruction of “Tors,” it’s hard not to notice growing problems around Mariupol. It’s categorically impossible to accumulate ammunition and fuel. “Coincidence? I don’t think so.”
4. Regular section – Crimea.
SSO reported making a stir on the outskirts of Sevastopol. In particular, they broke two antennas.
SBS once again showed what the north of Crimea has turned into.
Let me remind you that recently CSO “A” SBU drones took out two “Pantsirs” south of Dzhankoy. On the Arabat Spit, SBS eliminated an S-300, and in the Yakymivka area (Zaporizhia region), another “Pantsir”.
On the night of March 8, SBS destroyed the Russian occupiers’ warehouses in Novooleksiivka (temporarily occupied territory of the Kherson region). On the night of March 11, they hit the oil depot in the south of Dzhankoy (Michurinovka).
Most impressively: in Azovske (15 km southeast of Dzhankoy), Ukrainian drones took out 3 tankers that supplied the local oil depot (part of the Crimean Fuel and Energy Company, whose facilities have already been hit in the Simferopol industrial zone).
This is yet another warning: logistics through the “land corridor” and generally in the north of Crimea have already been significantly hampered. Private carriers will reconsider, and it will be even more difficult for the military. Considering the growing difficulties in the Mariupol area, the supply to the southern group of occupiers is under serious pressure…
In the cover: Strike on the “Kremniy El” plant, Bryansk, March 10, 2026. Photo: video screenshot
